Friday, April 22, 2011

Earth Day 2011

I spent my first Earth Day in 1970 working with a group to remove refuse from the banks of Coney Island Creek. It was the dawning of the environmental movement in the US, ignited by the iconic "Earthrise" photos taken by Bill Anders and Gene Borman during the Apollo 8 mission. We had our first glimpse of what Carl Sagan would later call "The Pale Blue Dot" and it made us realize how small and isolated our home planet is. Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring" had awakened us to the dangers of pesticides and Jacques Cousteau was documenting the collapse of the Mediterranean ecosystem.


Environmentalism grew through the 70's as Richard Nixon established the Environmental Protection Agency and legislation tumbled forth from Congress with idealistic names like the "Clean Water Act", the "Safe Drinking Water Act" and the "Clean Air Act". Woodsy the Owl exhorted us to "Give a Hoot, Don't Pollute" and a crying Native American reminded us daily to "Keep America Beautiful". We learned to reuse and recycle, and vowed that never again would the Cuyahoga River catch fire. Mile-long gas lines taught us how fragile our fossil fuel supply chain is, and made us resolve to seek alternative fuels.

As I survey the landscape some 40 odd years later, on the eve of Earth Day 2011, I fear that we have once again lost our way. We have done little to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels and our growing addiction combined with dwindling reserves has driven us to destructive extraction methods like mountaintop-removal coal mining, hydraulic fracturing for natural gas and processing tar sands for oil. Legislative wrangling, administrative loopholes and creative judicial interpretations allow these operations to circumvent the environmental protection intended by the Clean acts of the 70's. We've endured two massive crude oil spills in the most productive marine regions this country has to offer and we've over-harvested our seafood to the point of extirpating and nearly extincting several key species. What we haven't over-fished, we've poisoned with uncontrolled runoff and smothered in dead zones caused by eutrophied waters.


Our ceaseless combustion of coal dumps tons of mercury into our coastal waters which rapidly methylates and amplifies up the food chain, rendering the remaining large fish unfit to eat more than once a month. The multi-billion dollar fossil fuel industries, with the cooperation of some large media outlets, have waged a large-scale misinformation campaign and succeeded in tarring environmentalists as Socialist loons out to destroy America. All while they themselves are literally poisoning the air, water and land that we need to live. What is more frightening, nearly half of the population views research on climate change, ocean acidification and sea-level rise as an academic entitlement program designed to make scientists wealthy.

We are in deep trouble. Read more!

Friday, November 5, 2010

OldWeather.org

OldWeather.org is a website that harnesses the power of "citizen science" to help digitize old nautical log entries.

Help scientists recover worldwide weather observations made by Royal Navy ships around the time of World War I. These transcriptions will contribute to climate model projections and improve a database of weather extremes. Historians will use your work to track past ship movements and the stories of the people on board.
http://www.oldweather.org/

Read more!

CBO Cost Estimate for H.R. 5509

The Congressional Budget Office has released its Cost Estimate for H.R.5509, the Chesapeake Bay Program Reauthorization and Improvement Act which was reported favorably with amendments on July 28 by the House Agriculture Committee.


H.R. 5509 would reauthorize and amend the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s)Chesapeake Bay program. This legislation would authorize appropriations for EPA over the 2011-2015 period to provide grants to state agencies or municipalities to construct wastewater and stormwater treatment projects. In addition, it would establish the Independent Evaluation and Technical Advisory Committee to review and report on restoration activities in the Chesapeake Bay. H.R. 5509 also would establish the Chesapeake Bay Nutrient and Sediment Trading Commission to oversee and administer a trading program for certain point and nonpoint sources of nutrients and sediment in Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia. Finally, enacting this legislation would require the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to establish a pilot program for creating environmental service markets (that is, markets for carbon storage, flood control, and other projects that do not typically compensate farmers and landowners). Assuming appropriation of the necessary amounts, CBO estimates that implementing this legislation would cost $2.4 billion over the 2011-2015 period.

Read the CBO Cost Estimate here. [PDF]
Read more!

Friday, August 6, 2010

Latest NOAA Spill Extent Forecasts


Near Shore



Click on thumbnail for full-sized image



Loop Current Proximity



Emergency Fishery Closure




Read more!

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Latest NOAA Spill Extent Forecasts


Near Shore



Click on thumbnail for full-sized image



Loop Current Proximity



Emergency Fishery Closure




Read more!

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Latest NOAA Spill Extent Forecasts


Near Shore



Click on thumbnail for full-sized image



Loop Current Proximity



Emergency Fishery Closure




Read more!

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Latest NOAA Spill Extent Forecasts


Near Shore



Click on thumbnail for full-sized image



Loop Current Proximity



Emergency Fishery Closure


Read more!